Tuesday, December 30, 2014

New Year's resolutions may be more procrastination than motivation

A resolution can be a way of putting off what can be done today, experts say. Photo: K.R. Deepak
People seeking to get or stay fit in 2015 might do better to start today rather than rely on a New Year's resolution to shape up tomorrow, fitness experts say.
Losing weight and getting fit and healthy are among the top five resolutions every year, even though most of winter's great expectations wither by spring.
"The New Year's resolution is a kind of grand, glorified, long-term goal that people, for societal reasons, tend to begin on the first day of the calendar year," said Gregory Chertok, a sports psychology consultant with the American College of Sports Medicine.
"'I'd like to cut down on junk food a little bit,' is a goal more likely to be accomplished than 'I'll completely revamp my lifestyle,' which is the kind of goal we set as a New Year's resolutions," Mr. Chertok said.
Dr. Michele Olson, professor of exercise science at Auburn University Montgomery said a resolution can be a way of putting off what can be done today.
"If there is a fitness need, such as to increase strength or decrease body fat, I say, 'Let's make a plan now,'" Dr. Olson said, adding that what is essential is to set a long-term plan with short-term goals.
"This is why athletes stay in shape year-round. They have a program scheduled and planned over an entire year with variation, rest days, more-intense and less-intense workout periods," she said. "It's like one's job: there's very little vacation time."
Dr. Cedric X. Bryant, chief science officer of the American Council on Exercise, said the New Year may be the worst time to make a lifestyle change.
"For many it's the busiest, most hectic time," he said, "and most people have an all-or-nothing mentality."
Dr. Bryant said people who succeed focus on progress, not perfection, and plan for the inevitable slip-up.

Excise sop ends, cars to be costlier from January

Car makers had said removal of excise duty relief could push the industry into a negative territory. File photo
Cars, SUVs and two-wheelers will become expensive from January 1 with the government deciding not to extend the reduced excise duty rates provided to the sector.
“The government is not extending the excise duty concessions on the auto sector,” a senior Finance Ministry official said.
Excise duty was reduced to 24 per cent from 30 per cent in the case of SUVs, 20 per cent for mid-sized car from 24 per cent and 24 per cent for large cars from 27 per cent.
After two successive years of sales slump, the auto industry had shown growth of 10.01 per cent in April-November period this fiscal at 1.33 crore units as against 1.21 crore units in the year-ago period.
Car makers had been asking the government to extend excise duty relief, saying removal of this incentive could push the industry into a negative territory.
Maruti Suzuki India Chairman R.C. Bhargava had said if the incentive is not continued, automobile prices would go up further in the next year.
Keywords: SIAMautomobile sector